The Mason City Globe-Gazette from Mason City, Iowa · Page 3

Page 3 article text (OCR)

FEBRUARY
25
1931
MASON
CITY
GLOBE-GAZETTE
i$a0nu
(Eilg
(Sinbe
A
Lee
Syndicate
Newspaper
Issued
Every
Week
Day
by
the
6
MA
SON
CITY
GLOBE-
GAZET*TE
COMPANY
1-123
East
State
St.
Telephone
No.
3800
'
SERVICE
MEN
FAVOR
DRILL
WILL
p.
MUSE
Editor
W.
EARL
HALL
Managing
Editor
p.
LOOMIS
Business
Manager
MEMBER
OF
THE
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
The
Associated
Pr^pa
is
exclusively
entitled
to
the
use
for
publication
of
all
news
dispatches
credited
to
it
or
not
otherwise
credited
in
this
paper,
and
also
all
'
*
"
news
published
herein.
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
Daily,
per
year.
"'92
I
Daily,
per
week
1E
*
Outside
of
Mason
City
and
Clear
Lalie
Daily,
per
year
by
carrier
Daily,
per
week
by
carrier
W
Daily,
per
year
by
mail.,
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
K
6
months,
52.25;
3
months,
$1.2o;
1
month
oo
iÂ£
Outside
100
mile
zone,
daily,
per
year
6.00
,lÂ£8
months
$3.25
3
months....
.
1.75
fejntered
at
the
Postoffice
at
Mason
City,
Iowa,
as
**
:
"
Â·"
Second
Class
Matter
is
being
said
by
the
anti-military
training
^**
forces
about
how
pronounced
the
division
is
among
service
men'on
the
question.
Let's
see.
s
-
In.the
legislature
at
present
there
are
24
Legionnaires.
Twenty-three
of'them
are
in
favor
of
continuing:
drill
at
the
tax-supported
institutions.
At
a
fourth
district
Legion
convention
two
years
ago
at
Elkadfir
a
resolution
favoring
the
continuance
of
military
drill
was
adopted
with
one
dissenting
vote
in
a
meeting'
participated
in'by
nearly
200
service
men.
On
what
other
question
will
one
find
this
close
an
approach
to
unanimity?
"Honesty
is
the
best
policy,"
but
he
who
works
on
that
principle
I.
Â«
NO
VINDICATION
INTENDED
rT'S
a
reasonable
view
that
the
house
vote
this
week
Â·*Â·
on
the
question
of
investigating:
the
record
of
Lieut.
Gov.
Arch
W.
McParlane
was
more
in
the
nature
of
a
judgment
that
the
house
should
not
meddle
with
the
senate's
private
business
than
a
vindication
of
the
official's
conduct
at
all
times.
OTHER
EDITORS
5-YEAR
PLAN
AT
CRUCIAL
POINT
THE
OLD
HOME
TOWN
.
.
.
.
.
.
By
Stanley
,ia
is
me
great
enigma
of
this
generation
and
because
of
the
importance
to
the
world
of
the
fate
of
her
five-year
plan,
information
about
its
progress
is
eagerly
sought.
It
is
hard
to
get,
however,
for
it
is
usually
colored
with
propaganda
for
or
against
the
Russian
political
system.
Ralph
Budd,
president
of
the
Great
Northern
railway
who
went
to
Russia
last
year
as
an
adviser
of
the
Soviets
on
railroad
development,
talked
last
week
in
Chicago
and
gave
an
apparently
unbiased
summary
of
his
impressions.
The
chief
of
them
is
that
while
Russia
is
making
[
great
progress
in
setting
up
her
industrial
plant,
it
is
"not
yet
producing.
Huge
works
have
been
built,
but
vsry
little
is
coming
from
them
to
raise
Russian
standards
of
living.
In
the
meantime
the'Russian
people
are
down
to
bedrock
in
the
way
of
diet,
to
finance
'the
tremendous
effort
the
government
is
making.
The
farm
must
carry
the
load
of
supplying
the
vast
amount
of
exports
needed
to
finance
the
enormous
industrial
projects.
Mr.
Budd
.said
that
normally
there
would
j
not
be
much
of
a
food
surplus
to
export
from
Russia,
and
he
suggested
that
the
Russians
would
not
go
on
[forever
just
above
the
starvation
point,
even
at
gov-
|
eminent
orders.
,.
I
This
indicates
that
the
five-year
plan,
and
with
it
f
possibly
the
soviet
system
of
government,
may
be
tracing
its
crucial
test
this
year.
It
was
launched
in
October,
1928,
and
supreme
efforts
are
being
made
r
to
complete
the
plan
a
year
ahead
of
time--by
the
Kfall
of
1932.
Mr.
Budd
says
that
Russians
have
be-
Irorae
a
silent,
serious
people
lacking
in
gayety,
that
i
labor
turnover
is
high
and
productive
efficiency
seems
Jilow
One
gathered
that
he
sees
the
situation
as
a
race
Rio
get
the
huge
new
industrial
plant
into
production
fefore
something
gives
in
the
temper
of
the
people.
:e
is
up
doubt
that
Russia
ia
resorting
to
extra-
y'me^ufeiii
siuu
naVcoi.ilpl
.be--adopted
nowhere
e;
,
u*
thd
world,
:
to
force
everybody
to
work,
to
pre-
.vent
strikes
and
stoppages.
It
is
a
remarkable'demon-
istration
of
the
regimentation
of
a
people,
and
for
all
W
grim
force
by
which
it
Is
applied,
it
is
doubtful
if
it
could
be
enforced
were
there
not
a
general
accept-
:ance
of
the
aims
and
objects
of
the
government.
But
if
the
Soviets
cannot
make
good
their
promises,
there
may
be
a
terrible
reaction.
TRYING
TO
"DO"
IOWA
Ottuimva
Courier:
An
Iowa
legislative
bill
make
military
training
optional
at
Iowa
City
and
Ames
is
opposed
by
action
of
the
Ottumwa
Chamber
of
Commerce.
Arguments
on
both
sides
have
been
heard
by
a
legislative
committee.
Preparatory
to
the
discussion
in
the
house
and
senate,
Iowa
has
been
visited
during
the
last
few
weeks
by
members
of
the
national
council
of
the
Committee
on
Militarism
in
Education.
Their
arrival
here
at
this
time
was
not
a
coincidence.
It
is
part
of
the
national
campaign
to
have
training
in
the
state
schools
declared
optional,
as
a
step
toward
abolishment.
Sherwood
Eddy
and
Frederick
J.
Libby,
nationally-
known
radicals,
have
been
out
here
talking.
It
might
be
fair
to
inquire
why
all
the
great
interest
in
Iowa
just
at
this
time,
were
it
known
they
have
been
in
the
state
as
lobbyists.
They
have
come
to
tell
the
citizens
of
our
state
that
we
should
abandon
our
part
of
the
responsibility
for
national
defense.
They
do
not
come
with
clean
hands.
They
reek
of
the
odor
of
their
communist
associates
and
associations.
It
is
high
time
the
patriotic
and
loyal
'citizens
of
Iowa
get
into
this
question
to
the
point
of
learning
what
is
going
on.
When
our
people
are
informed
that
the
suggestion
to
abandon
military
training
in
our
state
schools
comes
from
friends
of
red
Russia,
there
is
little
doubt
but
that
they
know
what
to
do.
SHORTER
HOURS
FOR
POSTAL,
EMPLOYES
\A'isconsin
State
Journal:
Both
houses
of
congress
have
passed
the
Kendall
bill
providing
for
a
44-hour
week
for
the
employes
of
the
United
States
postoffice
department.
There
is
little
question
that
the
signature
of
President
Hoover
will
be
accorded
to
the
measure
and
that
it
will
become
a
law.
Congress
has
acted
wisely
in
lowering
the
hour:
for
employes
in
the
.postoffice
service.
The.
work
is
arduous.
A
shortening
of
the
hours
will
be
of
real
benefit
to
the
postal
department
employes.
The
public
is
becoming
impressed
with
the
idea
that
shorter
hours
for
labor
must
come
in
all
lines
of
industry.
Many
regard
a
seven-hour
day
for
labor
as
the
most
efficient
remedy
that
can
be
proposed
to
prevent
overproduction.
The
federal-government
is
taking
wise
step
in
leadership
on
labor
questions
in
setting
the
example
for
a
shorter
working
day
in
granting
reduced
hours
to
the
postal
employes.
Vs/ELL
ILL
BE
I
KNEW
SHE
VJAS
HEADING
FOR
ME
BUT
1
DIDNT
KNOW
SHE
COULD
SMASH
A
PIPE
TWENTY
FEET
AWAY
!.'Â·'
SARAHS
ON
=1
THE
WAR
PATH
AGAIN',
,4
HIM
OF
HIS
)_,FEI
PICKED
OFF
,HIS
Pipe
THE
R15ST
SHOT!
fcLJNT*CL.AVPOoi-
HAS
KNOWN
AUNT
SARAH
REPUTATION
FO(5
DESTfeoYJNC?
p,p
ES
_
guy
HIS
EXPERIENCE
TODAY
WAS
JUST
MORE
THAN
HE
COULD
we
did
not
believe
Â·
Â«
Â·
L
1
"
Â·
if
possible
DIET
and'
HEALTH
By
LOGAN
CLENDENING,
M.
D.
Author
of
"THE
HUMAN
BODY"
Dr.
Clcmlening
cannot
diagnose
or
give
personal
answers
(o
letters
from
readers.
When
questions
are
of
general
Interest,
however,
t
h
e
y
vlll
be
taken
u
p
r
In
order,
in
the
daily
column.
Address
your
queries
to
Dr.
Logan
Clendenlns,
care
oE
The
Globe-Gazette.
Write
IcKibly
and
not
more
than-
ZOO
\vordn.
A
QUEEN
OF
YESTERDAY
rr\O
A
GENERATION,
raised
on
synthetic
entertam-
Â·1-
ment,
Dame
Melba
was
as
remote
and
as
much
of
memory
as
Jennie
Lind.
The
Australian
Nightingale
...
_s
the
successor
of
the
golden
voiced
maid
from
Sweden.
Her
triumphs
and
conquests
were
of
another
day.
Her
death
in
distant
Australia
recalls
the
"Gay
Nine)'
ties,"
the
last
fling
of
the
dying
Victorian
era.
Melba
made
her
debut
in
grand
opera
more
than
forty
years
ago
in
Brussels.
Her
appearance
in
London
was
even
more
brilliant.
Her
name
was
on
every
tongue
when
she
came
to
America
in
'93,
singing
with
the
De
Reskes
at
Chicago
during
the
world's
fair.
:
The
acclaim
with
which
a
new
operatic
star
was
re-
I
ceived
then,
the
eagerness
with
which
her
appearance
'
was
awaited,
is
unknown
to
a
generation
which
thru
the
medium
of
radio,
has
-been
so
regaled
by
the
most
'
exquisite
voices
as
to
lose
the
thrill
which
came
of
hearing
Melba
and
those
who
shared
honors
with
her.
Parental
objections
failed
to
deter
this
richly
endowed
young
woman
from
a
career
which
was
to
bring
her
universal
renown.
Her
gift
she
would
not
repress
and
tho
her
audience
^
at
her
first
public
recital
was
composed
of
but
two
persons,
due
to.the
pleadings
of
her
father
that
their
friends
stay
away,
thousands
were
later
to
clamor
to
get
within
range
of
her
voice
of
such
purity
and
flexibility
as
to
gain
for
her
an
imperishable
fame.
A
MOVE
TOWARD
ROAD
SAFETY
TjiIGURES
given
out
at
Washington
indicate
that
Â·*Â·
every
year
500,000
new
drivers--a
potential
menace
to
life
and
property--are
turned
loose
on
the
public.
In
a
few
states
there
are
safeguards,
means
to
guarantee
that
tb?
driver
is
competent.
But
mostly
it's
an
invitation
to
him
to
take
to
the
open
road
and
do
whatever
damage
he
can.
^
Iowa
has
before
it
now
a
proposal
to
license
drivers.
There
may
be
some
debate
about
whether
the
specific
plan,
or
plans,
are
better
than
some
others.
But
about
the
policy
of
licensing
drivers
there
should
not
be
much
argument.
A
North
Iowa
editor
criticizes
one
proposal
because
it
seems
more
designed
to
raise
additional
revenue
i?
than
to
increase
motoring
safety.
On
this
point
we
fi
agree
with
him.
The
sole
purpose
of
any
legislation
along
this
line
should
be
to
remove
incompetent
drivers
from
the
road.
Certainly
there
is
no
reason
for
including
a
fee
which
will
be
greater
than
the
actual
cost
ol
administering
the
law.
In
fact,
we're
riot
sure
that
a
wiser
expenditure
could
be
made
from
funds
already
available
for
highway
\ises.
The
present
legislature
should
address
itself
in
a
serious
way
to
the
task
of
reducing
the
hazards
of
highway
travel.
A
driver's
license
law
and
a^law
which
would
make
every
motorist
prove
in
advance
that
he
is
prepared
to
meet
the
financial
responsibilities
involved
in
motoring
appeal
to
us
as
proper
beginning
steps
toward
that
end.
THE
KAILUOADS
DID
IT
.
Rlngsteil
Dispatch:
The
railroads
have
hauled
hundreds
of
carloads
of
foodstuffs
to
the
starving
people
in
the
south.
When
application
was
made
here
in
Ringsted
for
a
car
in
which
to
ship
eggs'the
car
was
ordered
here
in
less
than
24
hours,
altho
application
had
to
be
made
thru
the
Red
Cross
in
St.
Louis.
How
much
foodstuff
has
been
hauled
free
of
charge
by
the
buses
and
trucks?
Who
would
haul
food
to
Ringsted
free
of
charge
if
we
were
suffering?
Think
of
this
when
you
take
your
next
trip
or
when
you
have
freight
shipments
to
make.
Present
railroad
competition
is
unfair
because
the
railroad
must
fur-
nis
its
own
roadbed
and
pay
taxes
thereon
while
the
competition
does'neither.
TIMES
CHANGED
SINCE
LINCOLN
The
Passing
Show:
Today
1
out
of
every
11
men
you
meet
is
a
governmental
employe.
The
country
is
smothered
by
legislation.
The
attempts
to
regulate
the
business
activities
of
the
people
have
resulted
in
multitudes
of
government
bureaus,
boards
and
commissions--hives
of
bureaucracy,
from
which
swarms
of
government
agents
fly
over
the
land,
disciplining
industry
and
trade
and
eating
up
the
substance
of
the
people.
When
Lincoln
became
president
there
were,
all
told,
fewer
than
one
public
official
to
every
800
adult
citizens.
THE
BOY
WITH
A
GUN
Cedar
Falls
Ilecord:
An
Iowa
Falls
boy
came
down
to
Steamboat
Rock
with
a
big
revolver
and
an
old
model
flivver
to
rob
a
bank.
He
left
the
bank
with
$1,500,
but,
he
did
not
go
far.
The
vigilantes
got
him
and
recovered
all
the
stolen
money.
It
is
not
difficult
to
Â·
understand
where
these
boys
of
the
small
towns
get
their
ideas
of
holdups
and
it
is
not
difficult
to
understand
why
it
is
that
nine
out
of
ten
of
the
youths
who
resort
to
crime
for
riches
eventually
find
themselves
behind
prison
bars.
COMPLETING
THE
CYCLE
Brttt
News
Tribune:
The
Northwood
Anchor
says
that:
"A
great
deal
of
trouble
in
this
world
is
caused
by
the
fact
that
a
girl
will
marry
a
man
she
doesn't
love
and
then
begin
loving
a
man
she
doesn't
marry."
Yes,
sir,
Mr.
Barnes,
and
there
is
also
the
girl
who
will
"step
out"
with
a
married
man.
And
often
that
leads
to
alienation;
and
alienation
leads
to
court
proceedings,
and
divorce,
and
another
wedding--even
tho
it
may
start
in
the
spirit
of
fun.
WHY
WATCH?
Toledo
Blade:
Mussolini
doesn't
want
war,
Japan
doesn't
want
war,
Germany
doesn't
want
war,
France
doesn't
want
war,
the
United
States
abhors
war.
It
might
be
well
to
watch
Switzerland.
HEAT
METHOD
OF
SURGERY
DISCUSSED
OTJRGICAL
DIATHERMY,
like
medical
diathermy,
is
-)
the
production
of
heat
in
the
tissues
to
which
it
is
applied,
hy
means
of
a
high
frequency
electric
current.
The
heat
vised
in
surgical
diathermy
is
much
higher
than
in
the
medical
form,
so
high
indeed
that
it
cauterizes
and
destroys
the
tissues
to
which
it
is
applied.
Its
effect
is
really
no
different
from
that
of
a
cautery,
but
it
has
several
technical
advantages
over
a
cautery--it
can
be
better
controlled.
Its
use
in
small
tumors
in
inaccessible
places,
such
as
in
the
back
of
the
throat
and
in
the
bladder
is
well
demonstrated.
The
use'
about
which
the
great
est
amount
of
interest
is
aroused
to
judge
by
the
letters
and
inquiries
I
have
received,
is
for
removal
o
the
tonsils.
I
have
investigated
anc
studied
the
question
at
some
length
!
and
intend
to
set
down
here
the
plainest
facts
about
the
matter
as
:
Or.
dlciirtening
have
been
able
to
gather
them,
at
tempting:
to
be
neither
a
dangerously
enthusiastic
ad
vocate
nor
the
too
conservative
opponent
of
a
nev
method.
Diathermy
may
be
used
to
remove
the
tonsils
in
one
of
two
ways.
First,
at
a
single
sitting.
Either
a
local
or
a
general
anesthetic
must
be
used.
One
elec
trode
is
placed
on
the
patient's
skin,
preferably
on
th.
back
of
the
neck.
The
other
electrode,
a
smail
need!
in
which
a
large
amount
of
the
heatris
generated,
i
run
around
each
tonsil
until
it
is
completely
destroyed
There
is
some
pain
and
sloughing.
The
patient
has
t
remain
quiet
fof
v
several
days.
The
other
method
requires
from
four
to
six
treatments
for
each
tonsil.
A
part
of
the
tonsil
is
destroyed
at
each
sitting.
A
local
anesthetic
is
used.
There
is
little
discomfort
and
little
disability
or
necessity
of
remaining
in
bed
after
the
procedure.
Judging
the
advantages
or
disadvantages
of
the
diathermy
removal
of
tonsils
over
the
regular
surgical
procedure
I
can
see
little
difference
between
the
single
procedure,
whether
diathermy
or
surgery
is
used.
Both
require
a
period
of
disability
and
involve
some
discomfort.
.In
expert
hands,
the
man
familiar
with
hia
own
method--surgery
or
diathermy--will
give
about
equal
results.
,,
The
removal
in
several
stages
by
diathermy
seems
to
offer
some
advantages
to
those
who
care
to
afford
the
time.
There
is
little
pain
or
disability.
Children
cannot
usually
be
persuaded
to
undergo
the
several
treatments
necessary,
I
gather,
so
it
is
applicable
almost
entirely
to
adults.
EARLIER
DAYS
[U'ltig
B.
Dally
Complin.
Him
nf
Inlerphtlnc
Item
A
from
tlio
"Tivcnty
Years
Ago"
FUCK'of
Hie
Glnbe-Gazcltc.
FEB.
25,
1U11
Kriltnr'n
Nole:
Six
pamphlets
hy
Dr.
ClcmlentriK
can
no\v
to
obtnlncd
by
Rending-
10
cents
In
coin
for
each
and
a
self-
addretiser],
stamped
envelope,
to
Dr.
Logan
ClenricnlnR,
In
care
of
this
paper,
or
Central
Press
Association,
1435
Kast
Twelfth
fit
reel.
Cleveland,.,
Ohio.
The
pamphlets
arc:
"indigestion
and
Constipation,''
"Reducing
and
Gaining,"
"Tnfrtnt
Feeding."
"Instructions
for
the
Treatment
of
Diabetes,"
"Feminine
Hy-
Ele'ne"
nnd
"The
Care
of
the
Hair
and
Skin."
Fellowship
of
Prayer
A
Daily
Lenten
Feature
Presented
in
Co-
Operation
With
the
Federal
Council
of
the
Churches
of
Christ
in
America
CopyrlKlited
19:11
THE
TEMPTATION
OF
FAITH
(Read
LuUc
17:5,
6
nnd
4:0-13.
Text,
Luke
'
4:12).
Thou
slialt
not
tempt
the
Lord
tiiy
God.
At
the
climax
of
His
temptations
our
Lord's
agitation
was
intense.
It
was
madness
that
was
knocking
at
His
mind
that
day,
for
He
waa
tempted
to
do*
crazy
thing,
trusting
to
God
to
see
Him
thru.
Supremely
sane,
as
He
always
was,
He
put
the
temptation
from
Him.
Faith
is
not
the
abandonment
of
common
sense,
but
reason
in
its
highest
exercise.
It
does
not
bid
ua
to
trifle
with
eternal
laws,
but
rather
to
respect
them.
Jesus
recognized
the
evil
source
of
this
suggestion
that
He
should
do
a
foolish
thing.
He
said:
"Get
thee
behind
me,
Satan."
Those
who
propose
a
rash
testing
of
faith
may
well
give
heed
to
the
intimation.
We
will
trust
God
where
we
cannot
see;
but
where
we
see
we
should
employ
proper
means
to
attain
our
ends.
To
obey
is
better
than
sacrifice.
Prayer:
Almighty
God,
Who
hast
appointed
laws
for
our
governance,
we
pray
that
Thou
wilt
preserve
our
faith
from
the
presumption
of
vanity
and
the
delusions
of
folly,
that
we
sin
not
by
tempting
Thee.
JUST
FOLKS
~~
Hy
EIXJAR
,1.
GUESi.
THE
IDLE
DONKEY
A
donkey,
busy
day
by
day.
Found
little
time
or
cause
to
x
bray,
But
left
alone
the
field
to
browse
The
neighborhood
he'd
soon
arouse.
Turned
loose
he'd
kick
his
heels
and
race
And
scatter
ruin
round
the
place;
By
wandering
where
his
fancy
led
He
wrecked
full
many
a
flower
bed.
Unbridled
and
untethered
he
Jn
mischief
always
seemed
to
be.
At
him
the
women
used
to
shout
And
run
with
brooms
to
shoo
him
out.
This
idle
donkey
always
found
The
neighbor's
raked
and
seeded
ground;
And
left
to
wander
all
day
long
Whate'er
he
thot
to
do
was
wrong.
Good
people
scarce
will
cast
an
eye
At
busy
donkeys
passing
by,
But
idle
donkeys
running
loose
No
end
of
mischief
will
produce.
The
directorate
of
the
Commercial
club
is
happy
o
announce
that
it
has
obtained
a
paid
secretary
for
he
coming
year
in
the
person
of
John
A.
Sly
of
Waterloo.
Mr.
Sly
was
not
chosen
until
after
the
most
thoro
investigation
was
made
of
his
business
ability
and
industry
and
every
source
reported
in
he
same
satisfactory
manner.
Mr.
Sly
was
secretary
of
the
Commercial
club
at
Waterloo
when
he
accomplished
its
most
potential
work
and
only
resigned
after
period
of
energy,
because
he
had
an
opportunity
to
o
into
business
for
himself.
A
death
in
the
firm
made
t
possible
for
Mr.
Sly
to
accept
a
proposition
to
go
back
into
his
chosen
field
and
the
Mason
City
directorate
feel
that
they
were
highly
fortunate
in
procuring
him
before
other
offers
had
reached
him.
Mr.
Sly
will
be
introduced
publicly
to
the
Commercial
club
Monday
night
at
a
smoker
which
will
be
given
in
the
assembly
room
at
the
courthouse.
Office
quarters
have-been
procured
for
the
secretary
and
it
will
be
interesting
to
know
that
he
will
be
ready
for
business
tomorrow.
All
the
committees
are
at
work
and
they
expect
to
show
great
progress
by.the
time
the
year
is
over.
Flour
went
off
again
today
with
a
drop
of
20
cents
a
barrel.
This
is
a
drop
of
SO
cents
a
barrel
the
past
two
weeks
which
is
equivalent
to
20
cents
a
sack.
Local
merchants
have
not
indicated
their
intentions
of
following
the
market
down
as
the
flour
stays
at
the
same
old
mark.
Hogs
went
off
25
cents
today
and
the
best
that
was
offered
was
$6.50.
From
?6.25
to
56.50
caught
the
bulk
of
them.
The
market
is
full.
There
was
a
good
sized
crowd
in
attendance
at
the
Bijou
last
night
to
watch
the
work
of
the
knights
of
the
wrestling
game
and
the
manly
art.
The
program
carried
some
good
boxing
and
wrestling
aside
from
the
main
event
between
Vrehn
of
this
city
and
Thompson
of
Sheldon,
in
which
the
former
won.
The
first
fall
went
to
the
visitor
in
25
minutes
of
real
battling.
Prehn,
however,
put
the
match
to
his
credit
with
'the
second
and
third
falls
procured
in
fast
time.
Irregularities
were
cited
today
by
the
attorneys
or
D.
D.
Murphy
in
the
Haugen-Murphy
contest
with
le
method
in
which
the
ballots
were
delivered
to
the
ounty
auditor
from
the
city
wards'
voting
booths,
n
three
wards
it
was
alleged
the
chief
of
police
de-
vered
the
returns
when
the
law
says
this
must
be
one
by
the
judges
of
election.
This
is
considered
rregular.
The
next
step
in
the
contest
hearing
will
be
racing
the
course
of
these
ballots
from
the
hands
f
the
judges
to
the
office
of
the
county
auditor.
The
ommissioner
adjourned
the
session
at
noon
till
March
when
the
investigation
will
be
continued.
The
boys
and
girls
basketball
teams
from
the
high
chool
returned
this
afternoon
from
Decorah
where
hey
played
a
doubleheader
game
with
the
Decorah
earns
last
evening.
Both
the
Mason
City
teams
were
efeated.'Miss
Martha
Beatty,
instructor
in
physical
raining,
and
Prof.
Leon
Woodward,
assistant
manual
raining
instructor,
accompanied
the
teams.
A
meeting
of
real
estate
men,
who
gathered
last
evening
in
the
office
of
P.
H.
Kehm
to
protest
against
the
passage
of
the
Samis
bill
in
the
Iowa
ifbuse
vas
adjourned
till
Thursday
night,
when
it
is
ex-
sected
a
larger
representation
will
be
present.
Ac-
:ording
to
the
real
estate
men,
while
some
favor
it,
t
is
understood
a
majority
is
opposed
to
the
bill.
The
jill
requires
that
no
verbal
contract
stand
as
between
L
property
owner
and
real
estate
agent
out
of
which
las
grown
a
large
amount
of
litigation
as
to
commission
but
that
if
commissions
are
to
be
collected,
there
must
be
a
contrail
to
that
effect.
Some
of
the
real
estate
men
favor
it
because
it
is
against
the
skinner
while
others
think
it
favors
that
ciasa
of
dealers.
Representative
Pickford
has
been
communicated
with
in
regard
to
this
matter.
ONE
MINUTE
PULPIT--Truly
my
soul
wait-
eth
upon
God:
from
Him
cometh
my
salvation.
He
only
ia
my
rock
and
my
salvation;
He
is
my
de-
fence;
I
shall
not
be
greatly
moved.--Psalm
Ixii,
1,
2.
YOU'RE
THE
JUDGE
DETER.
HEIDGEN
had
not
been
getting
along
with
I
his
neighbor,
Milt
Shimmel,
next
door.
One
afternoon,
as
Heidgen
was
working
in
his
back
yard,
Shimmel
also
came
out.
Shimmel
leaned
over
the
fence
and
started
the
usual
discourse
that
always
ended
in
hot
words.
This
time
was
no
exception.
The
talk
waxed
hotter
and
soon
grew
into
a
war
of
words.
Presently
Heidgen
walked
over
to
where
Shimmel
was
leaning
over
the
fence
and
pushed
his
face
ovfer
to
his
own
side
of
the
fence.
This
made
Shimmel
bitterly
angry,
and
the
more
he
thot
of
it
the
more
it
made
him
boil.
By
night
time
he
was
all
ready
to
start
a
war,
and
the
next
morning
he
did
go
to
his
lawyer
and
ordered
him
to
file
suit
for
assault
ana
battery.
How
would
you
decide
this
case?
Make
up
your
mind
before
you
rend
tho
decision.
The
dodHion:
The
court
hclrl
anMnnl
him.
The
JudKes
rcnsonert
tluis:
In
IcnnlnK
ncro.in
tht
lenco
Slilmrnc!
was
.1
Ircspna.icr.
Tlic
mere
fficl
that
lir.
dCil
not
step
nRroan
llje
fence
rll'l
not
make
lilm
any
Ic.i",
so.
The
rule
;s
llmt
Ihc
Utn
of
llic
owners
of
the
M.tl
extends
not
only
to
tlic
c
e
n
t
e
r
o(
the
carlh,
hut
upward
to
Ihc.
shy.
say
O
U
R
C
U
S
T
O
M
E
R
S
Many
are
the
times
prospects
have
dropped
in
just
out
of
curi-
osiiy.
They
wanted
lo
judge
for
themselves
whether
or
not
the
General
Electric
FULL
RANGE
Radio
really
was
ait
advance
in
radio
reception.
Their
ears
confirmed
what
their,
eyes
had
read.
Wj;
could
sec
the
surprise
in
their
faces
as
soon
as
they
heard
the
first
rich
natural
notes
of
FULL
RANGE
Tone.
"When
we
demonstrated
how
FULL
RANGE
Selectivity
banished
overlapping
and
how
F
U
L
L
R
A
N
G
E
Sensitivity
brought
in
distant
stations
they
were
convinced.
Come
in
and
hear
bow
a
General
Electric
VULL
RANGF.
Radio
will
bring
In
your
favorite
programs.
Any
G-F.
Radio
may
be
bought
on
the
Budget
Payment
plan.
The
G-E
Certified
Inspection
plan
applies
to
every
G-E
Radio
you
buy.
Special
for
Dollar
Day
$
1
Down
Places
Any
G.
E.
lladio
in
Your
Home
BUY
IT
ON
OUR
PAY-WITH-
YOUR-LIGHT-BILL-PLAN
People's
Gas
Electric
Company,
"FOR
ItETTISIt
Ari'HANCES"
SELLING
EntirÂ®
Men's
All
Values
to
$35
Further
reductions
on
Suits
from
our
former
sales
prices.
Every
one
a
good
sturdy
suit
with
style
and
quality.
Special
for
Dollar
Day
and
all
this
week--Â·
Men's
Values
F
L
A
N
N
E
L
PAJAMAS
Viilncs
to
S1.75
$1.19
HIGH
GRADE
Eagle
Shirts
Values
up
to
Union
Suits
Good
Blue
and
Gmy
Chanibruy
Work
Shirts
PLAY
SUITS
Four
P;Hcrns
Silk
Rayon
Hose,
50c
Quality
PAINTERS
OVERALLS
98c
Cotton
Flannel
Work
Shirts
69c
MEN'S
UNIONALS
$1.49
,,,,,,
$1.69